TopMyGrade

GCSE/Combined Science/OCR

P2.1Motion: distance, displacement, speed, velocity, acceleration; distance–time and velocity–time graphs

Notes

Motion (P2.1)

Motion questions appear in every OCR Gateway A Physics paper. Examiners want you to interpret graphs accurately, perform calculations, and use the correct equations with the right units.

Key definitions

QuantityDefinitionTypeUnit
DistanceTotal path length travelledScalarm
DisplacementStraight-line distance in a given direction from start to finishVectorm
SpeedRate of change of distanceScalarm/s
VelocityRate of change of displacement (speed in a given direction)Vectorm/s
AccelerationRate of change of velocityVectorm/s²

Scalars have magnitude only. Vectors have magnitude AND direction.

Speed and velocity

speed (or velocity) = distance (or displacement) ÷ time
v = s / t

Typical speeds to know:

  • Walking: ~1.5 m/s
  • Running: ~3 m/s
  • Cycling: ~6 m/s
  • Car on motorway: ~30 m/s
  • Speed of sound in air: ~340 m/s
  • Speed of light: ~3 × 10⁸ m/s

Acceleration

acceleration = change in velocity ÷ time taken
a = (v − u) / t

Where u = initial velocity, v = final velocity, t = time.

Units: m/s² (metres per second per second).

A negative acceleration (deceleration) means slowing down.

Distance–time (s–t) graphs

SectionMeaning
Straight upward slopeConstant speed
Steeper slopeGreater speed
Horizontal (flat) lineStationary (speed = 0)
Curved, getting steeperAccelerating
Curved, getting less steepDecelerating

The gradient of a distance–time graph = speed.

  • Gradient = Δs / Δt

Velocity–time (v–t) graphs

SectionMeaning
Straight upward slopeConstant acceleration
Horizontal (flat) lineConstant velocity (zero acceleration)
Straight downward slopeConstant deceleration
CurveNon-uniform acceleration or deceleration

The gradient of a velocity–time graph = acceleration.

  • Gradient = Δv / Δt

The area under a velocity–time graph = distance travelled.

  • Area = ½ × base × height (triangle) or length × height (rectangle).

Equations of motion (suvat)

For uniform (constant) acceleration:

v = u + at                     ... (1)
s = ½(u + v)t                  ... (2)
s = ut + ½at²                  ... (3)
v² = u² + 2as                  ... (4)

Where: s = displacement (m), u = initial velocity (m/s), v = final velocity (m/s), a = acceleration (m/s²), t = time (s).

At GCSE you need (1) and (3). Higher Tier may need (4).

Worked example: A car accelerates from rest (u = 0) at 3 m/s² for 8 s. Find the distance travelled.

  • s = ut + ½at² = 0 × 8 + ½ × 3 × 8² = 0 + ½ × 3 × 64 = 96 m

Terminal velocity

An object falling through a fluid experiences increasing drag as speed increases.

  1. Initially, weight > drag → object accelerates (net downward force).
  2. As speed increases, drag increases.
  3. Eventually, drag = weight → net force = 0 → constant velocity = terminal velocity.

On a velocity–time graph: starts with steep upward gradient (accelerating), gradient decreases, curve levels off at terminal velocity (horizontal).

Common Gateway-paper mistakes

  1. Mixing up distance–time and velocity–time graphs (gradient of d–t = speed; area under v–t = distance).
  2. Forgetting that constant speed ≠ constant velocity if direction changes (e.g. circular motion).
  3. Using total distance instead of displacement for velocity calculations.
  4. Confusing u (initial) and v (final) in the equations.
  5. Not converting units — km/h to m/s (divide by 3.6) or cm to m (divide by 100).

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Speed calculation

    A cyclist travels 540 m in 60 s.

    (a) Calculate the average speed of the cyclist. [2]
    (b) The cyclist then decelerates uniformly to a stop in 10 s. Calculate the deceleration. [2]

    [4 marks]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science

  2. Question 26 marks

    Velocity–time graph interpretation (6-marker)

    A car starts from rest. It accelerates uniformly for 10 s to reach 20 m/s, then travels at constant velocity for 20 s, then decelerates uniformly to rest in 5 s.

    (a) Sketch a velocity–time graph for the entire journey. Label key values. [3]
    (b) Calculate the total distance travelled. [3]

    [6 marks]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science

  3. Question 34 marks

    Equations of motion

    A ball is thrown upward with an initial velocity of 15 m/s. (g = 9.8 m/s² downward)

    (a) Calculate the time taken for the ball to reach its highest point. [2]
    (b) Calculate the maximum height reached. [2]

    [4 marks]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science

  4. Question 45 marks

    Terminal velocity explanation

    Describe and explain how the velocity of a skydiver changes from the moment they jump to when they reach terminal velocity (before opening the parachute).

    [5 marks]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science

  5. Question 54 marks

    Distance–time graph gradient

    A distance–time graph shows a straight line from the origin to (8 s, 32 m), followed by a horizontal section from (8 s, 32 m) to (12 s, 32 m).

    (a) State what the horizontal section tells you about the object's motion. [1]
    (b) Calculate the speed during the first section. [2]
    (c) State how you could tell from the graph if the object was accelerating (not just moving at a constant speed). [1]

    [4 marks]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science

Flashcards

P2.1 — Motion: distance, displacement, speed, velocity, acceleration; distance–time and velocity–time graphs

11-card SR deck for OCR Combined Science (J250) topic P2.1

11 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)